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originally posted by: LewsTherinThelamon
originally posted by: JUhrman
originally posted by: Hoosierdaddy71
Trusting a corporation is foolish.
Trusting a government agency to regulate corporations is just as foolish.
Who else than a government can regulate the corporate world? Please share you solution.
The people that buy things.
originally posted by: Edumakated
originally posted by: JUhrman
originally posted by: LewsTherinThelamon
a reply to: JUhrman
It's not unrealistic. If all countries but one agree, then it becomes easy to use economical or political pressure against said country.
When all else fails--coercion is the answer.
You actually sound a lot like the US government.
It's not coercion when the majority decides it. It's called democracy.
You are part of the problem thinking individual freedom is more important than common well-being.
All societies are based on the concept of the social contract. All. If you don't like it you can still live like an hermit. Until then, you too are part of this system and you too must bend to the laws that have been decided by the majority. If you don't like it, leave it.
Democracy is three wolves and a sheep deciding what is for dinner. There is a reason the US is a REPUBLIC and not a democracy. Democracy at its core is mob rule. The mob is not always right and certainly not rational.
So if the majority says they want to hold you in slavery are you saying that is ok?
It's not coercion when the majority decides it. It's called democracy.
If all countries but one agree, then it becomes easy to use economical or political pressure against said country.
You are part of the problem thinking individual freedom is more important than common well-being.
All societies are based on the concept of the social contract. All.
If you don't like it you can still live like an hermit.
Until then, you too are part of this system and you too must bend to the laws that have been decided by the majority. If you don't like it, leave it.
That simply won't work by itself. Most people are not educated. Many are desperate. That still will not answer many hidden externalities that the company is creating (many environmental impacts for example). Etc.
As the Op said, those who believe regulation is not necessary are totally naive. It would be a disaster for all.
So if the majority says they want to hold you in slavery are you saying that is ok?
originally posted by: LewsTherinThelamon
a reply to: Edumakated
So if the majority says they want to hold you in slavery are you saying that is ok?
What people like JUhrman and Quetzalcoatl14 don't outright say is that they both would be perfectly OK with human slavery, so long as they were the leash holders.
All the while they would be telling us we're too stupid to be freemen, that we agreed to slavery by contract, and that they have our best interests at heart and we should trust them.
They wouldn't call it slavery of course, they would sugarcoat it with double-speak and call it something stupid like "social welfare."
originally posted by: CranialSponge
A good first step in reducing the growing rate of corruption with corporate controls is to simply bring back the regulations that have been tossed into the waste bin over the decades.
The very reason why corporations have been able to gain such corruption and control over these past several decades is because the short leash they were originally tethered to has been removed, one piece at a time.